What to keep in your tactical first aid kit

Q: As a street cop, I know I need to be prepared to handle trauma wounds. What should I keep in my first aid kit to treat these?

Dr. Czarnecki: Police officers should carry a medical kit specifically designed for penetrating trauma (gunshot wounds and stab wounds). Such a kit can be assembled at a fairly low cost.

(AP file photo)

While it would be a good idea for officers to carry this small kit at all times, they should definitely carry it during high-risk activities, like warrant service and protective detail, and during firearms training (in case of accidental injuries). Contents should include:

GlovesI recommend nitrile gloves over latex. Nitrile is more resistant to puncture and chemicals, and do not cause the allergic reactions latex may.

TourniquetsA tourniquet is a tightly wrapped bandage that stops the flow of blood from an artery (usually a limb) by applying pressure. Tourniquets are safe and effective in trained hands -- if applied to an extremity for less than one hour. Tourniquets alone could save 60% of all the preventable deaths from combat trauma. My preferred tourniquet is the triangular bandage (usually 37 x 37 x 52 inches). It is cheap, lightweight, and easy to deploy. A lot of people are scared to apply tourniquets, but people are increasingly recognizing their critical life-saving importance.

Trauma dressingsThe key here is the ability to apply pressure to the wound, rather than just covering it and absorbing the blood. I recommend the Cederroth Bloodstopper, sold in most public safety catalogs.

Dr. Czarnecki is the Director of Medical-Legal Research with The Gables Group, Inc., a business intelligence and investigative consultancy based in Miami, FL, and the Director of Training of the Center for Homeland Security Studies, a non-profit corporation conducting training in counter-terrorism and intelligence for domestic law enforcement. He previously was an emergency physician of the Ambroise Pare Hospital, Boulogne, France.